Saturday, May 18, 2013

Why I Love South Africa & Still Have Hope!

So, lately I've been following the news on violence in Chicago, and have been really affected by it because I used to live there, and I have so many friends who still live there. Every day I see where the youth of today is going, and the light dwindles on if I think they can ever be rescued from the paths their lives have taken. However, a great friend just emailed me the link to this video of a 10 year-old poet from Mafikeng, South Africa named Botlhale Boikanyo...and this girl gave me so much HOPE for our youth. Her words and passion surmount her age in many ways! And if you know me, you know I believe that I originated from a tribe in South Africa (it could be very true!), so shout out to my young sister teaching us in this video! Watch Botlhale inspire!

I hope that gave you the goosebumps it gave me!

xoxo,

Jay

Saturday, May 11, 2013

The Importance of Being Concise


This idea hit me like a brick just now...

When I first started at DePaul nearly three years ago, my resume was four pages long. Four pages! Clearly, a college junior hadn’t done that much in her life up until to deserve such a lengthy resume, right? Well I felt I had. I insisted on listing every damn thing I did since I entered college – and even had some stuff on there I was involved in as early as 7th grade. Yikes. No wonder the best I could do was flipping ice cream for a living.

Although my four page resume was a low point in my career as a writer, I’ve always have a problem with being too wordy. I remember in 4th grade, I failed a writing assignment because I had written two pages when the assignment only called for one. I was too upset! I could not understand why my teacher wanted to fail me for going beyond her expectations, when the other kids were “very, very, very-ing” their way to a full page.

It was a learning experience that would soon come full circle. What my 4th grade teacher was trying to instill in me was the importance of being concise. Not just in writing, but in life, too. Get to the point. Don’t beat around the bush. Be straightforward and say what you mean. Most of the time, the stuff you say leading up to your point has no real place or meaning in your argument – think about it. Its just saying more stuff to introduce the stuff you’re eventually going to say. Conciseness is not a gift, but a skill, one that must be worked on and honed in order to completely settle upon.

I had to learn the hard way. After fourth grade, I started writing poetry.

-Jay

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Bring in the year with a BOOK LAUNCH!

Happy New Year!

My greeting is a month late, but definitely on time, as I see this being a great new year for many, including myself. Despite some financial hardships, a family loss, and some desperate soul searching, I am feeling very optimistic about this upcoming year.

In my previous post, I revealed that I would be publishing an ebook this summer. Although some things have changed, that mission is definitely still a go, and I can't wait to share my new work with you all!
Just a few updates on the book, it will include some poetry you've seen here on TJRD, and also some that have been shared on my Facebook. But it will also have some brand spankin' new poems that you haven't seen before, so get ready for the dopeness effect!!!

So, on to the title of this post: what to do for a book launch party?? I've been googling this and researching that for almost two months now, and I am still stumped on if I should have a book party for this ebook, or if I should just save the festivities for when my print book drops. I've been inspired from some Pinterest ideas and blog posts, but nothing really jumps out at me!

I don't want this milestone to go unrecognized! I would love to have some sort of celebration for the launch of this ebook, and I would to have some of you there :)

So whaddaya think? To book launch, or not to book launch? Your thoughts below!

xoxo,

Jaida